China's Renaissance man nabs taxi ride ahead of foreign rivals

Denny Thomas, Elzio Barreto

5 Min Read

HONG KONG (Reuters) - When little-known Chinese taxi-hailing app Didi Dache needed $15 million to grow its business two years ago, a local upstart investment bank stepped in to help it raise the funds from social networking giant Tencent Holdings Ltd.

In a twist, Kuaidi also wanted Bao on its side, leaving China Renaissance as sole financial adviser to both firms - a rare feat even in China, where tycoons have struck deals over a few drinks. “They both realized that the end-game was to come together,” Bao said in an interview.

Bao’s ability to single-handedly broker the deal - and he’s a self-confessed adrenaline junkie - underscores the growing clout of small and nimble corporate advisers in China, presenting a new threat to more established global firms.

Bao convinced the CEOs of Didi and Kuaidi - which are backed by Tencent and Alibaba respectively - to have dinner at a Shenzhen hotel in late January. The next day, the two CEOs, Bao and four others thrashed out the merger in a suite in the city’s Marriott Executive Apartments, a neutral venue away from the firms’ headquarters and the prying eyes of the media.

“We locked ourselves up until there was a compromise,” Bao said. “We were determined not to end the meeting without reaching a deal.”

‘FRIENDSHIP FIRST’

Well-connected local firms like China Renaissance are seeing a boom as entrepreneur-driven private businesses, particularly in the technology sector, overtake state-owned companies to drive investment banking revenues in China.

“Fan Bao is one of the most effective rainmakers in China today,” said Richard Ji, whose All Star Investments owns Didi shares. “He’s won friends among China’s tech industry with his charm and track record. And in Chinese culture, friendship comes first.”

“If you’re looking for the best connected banker to broker a deal in China, Fan Bao is your man,” said a former colleague of Bao’s at a western bank. “His secret sauce is his connectivity within China’s venture capital community.”

Bao declined to disclose the taxi app deal terms, but said the key was to leave one company with a slightly upper hand in the combined entity. For some global banks, working on both sides of deals presents conflicts.

“For a ‘friendly’ merger, I’m less concerned about a firm acting on both sides, especially as this will probably cut down on the fees,” said Mak Yuen Teen, associate professor at the National University of Singapore Business School. “I’m sure both parties are aware that the adviser is on both sides.”

China Renaissance worked on $4.44 billion worth of Chinese domestic M&A deals last year, an eightfold jump from the previous year and beating Barclays Plc, HSBC, Nomura Holdings and more established local rivals such as GF Securities, Thomson Reuters data showed. Morgan Stanley worked on $76.9 billion of deals last year.

With Bank of America, China Renaissance last year advised e-commerce company JD.com on selling a 15 percent stake to Tencent. In 2012, it advised Youku, with Goldman and Allen & Co LLC, on its $1 billion takeover of Tudou.

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS

Bao, a mixed martial arts enthusiast whose office walls are lined with pictures of racing cars, had long advised Didi in various fundraising rounds and was close to CEO Wei Cheng. He was introduced to Kuaidi CEO Dexter Chuanwei Lu in December through a contact at venture capital firm Matrix Partners, a Kuaidi shareholder.

Bao said he tried for more than a year to put the two taxi app firms together, and finally got a call in early January to help arrange the deal. His biggest challenge was to remain fair to both sides and manage any potential conflicts.

The boutique firm plans to beef up its M&A practice and sales and trading team as Chinese technology companies expand overseas, raise capital at home and as international companies seek a piece of China’s booming Internet and e-commerce market.

“Our addressable market is growing much faster than the rest of the economy,” Bao said. “I really think we can ride the new economy wave.”